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= Welcome to our wiki and to ELED 318 =

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Hello and welcome to our class wiki, I am Dan Davis your instructor, coach, and encourager. I currently teach 4th grade in a rural community on the Eastern Shore. This is my second career and my most enriching choice. Integrating technology into the classroom is what I believe I do best. Teaching this class, especially at Salisbury is something I've always wanted to do. I received my BS and my MS in Education at Salisbury University and my Doctorate at University of Maryland Eastern Shore. I hope you enjoy taking the class as much as I enjoy teaching the cours e.

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 This page is an example of what is required of you during this course. A wiki is a web site that lets anybody become a participant: you can create or edit the actual site contents without any special technical knowledge or tools. A wiki is a database of pages which visitors can edit live. A wiki is continuously “under revision.” It is a living collaboration whose purpose is the sharing of the creative process and product by many. A wiki makes it easy to swap ideas and information on projects--whether for a family vacation or a complex business enterprise. A famous example is Wiki-pedia, an online encyclopedia with no “authors” but millions of contributors and editors. The word "wiki" comes from Hawaiian language, meaning "quick" or "fast. There can be issues of legal liability and risk to reputation, particularly if you publish to the web. Options such as a moderated wiki format, user agreements, and locking some pages from public view can offer protection. A blog, or web log, shares writing and multimedia content in the form of “posts” (starting point entries) and “comments” (responses to the posts). While commenting, and even posting, are open to the members of the blog or the general public, no one is able to change a comment or post made by another. The usual format is post-comment-comment-comment, and so on. For this reason, blogs are often the vehicle of choice to express individual opinions. =====     media type="youtube" key="NN2I1pWXjXI?fs=1" height="229" width="288" align="center"

A wiki has a far more open structure and allows others to change what one person has written. This openness may trump individual opinion with group consensus.    media type="youtube" key="-dnL00TdmLY?fs=1" height="229" width="288" align="center"

